Ksenia Galouchko
Russian stocks headed for the biggest drop in a
week after oil prices slid to the lowest level this year. OAO
Lukoil, the country’s biggest non-state crude producer, led
declines on the benchmark stock gauge.
The 30-stock Micex Index (INDEXCF) sank 1.2
percent to 1,375.13 by 10:41 a.m. in Moscow, a second day of
losses. Lukoil, which has the largest weighting in the index,
slumped 3.8 percent after the register for shareholders to receive
a 75 ruble dividend closed yesterday. OAO Rostelecom, the nation’s
dominant fixed- line phone operator, fell 1.4 percent. Federal Grid
Co. rose 0.5 percent after OAO MRSK Holding confirmed reports that
it will be managed by Russia’s power transmission network.
Russia-focused equity funds recorded this year’s
biggest outflows in the week ended May 9, posting redemptions of
$188 million, according to EPFR Global. Oil, Russia’s main export
earner, fell 1 percent to $96.13 a barrel in New York yesterday,
the lowest settlement since Dec. 19.
“The Russian market is pressured by
the decline in oil prices,” Mark Rubinstein, head of research at
IFC Metropol, said by phone from Moscow. ‘We’re seeing risk
aversion, investors are leaving the emerging markets. It’s unlikely
that the Russian market will rise next week, most likely will be
flat.’’
China Data
China’s industrial output rose 9.3 percent in
April from a year earlier, the statistics bureau reported
yesterday. That missed a 12.2 percent median estimate in a
Bloomberg News survey of 32 economists. Most metals fell on the
London Metal Exchange.
Russia, the world’s biggest energy exporter and
the largest producer of nickel, received almost 50 percent of
budget revenue from oil and gas sales last year, according to
government estimates. Brent oil for June settlement slipped 47
cents, or 0.4 percent, to end the session at $112.26 a barrel on
the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange.
Trading volumes on the Micex slumped 30 percent
in April from the month before compared with a 22 percent drop in
the same period a year earlier.
Russian stocks trade at 5.2 times estimated
earnings, having lost 1.9 percent this year. That compares with a 6
percent gain for the MSCI Emerging-Market Index which trades at 9.8
times projected earnings.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-12/russia-stocks-drop-2nd-day-on-oil-at-2012-low-lukoil-retreats.html